The show’s most powerful moments come from its small cultural specificities.
The series informs sitcom hijinks with a bit of political tension, but the punchlines are diluted for the sake of likability.
Jesse Peretz’s film is loaded with inconsequential detours and questionable character psychology.
The filmmakers mine a good deal of satirical humor from their characters’ thirst for extravagance.
The episode abounds in the excruciatingly awkward would-be-alpha-male slang that is the show’s specialty.
The episode ties together multiple plot threads by connecting them all to the fate of See Food.
The latest episode of the show takes a satiric look at the all-important yet elusive concept of intellectual property.
The episode is full of wonderfully wooden nerd-boy stabs at what Donald Trump calls locker-room talk.
The majority of the film manages to circumvent the blunt allure of vaguely jingoistic “Boston Strong” patriotism.